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Paper prepared for the World Bank conference on Access to Finance
RETURNS TO CAPITAL IN MICROENTERPRISES: EVIDENCE FROM A FIELD EXPERIMENT Christopher Woodruff, UCSD (With Bob Cull and David McKenzie) Paper prepared for the World Bank conference on Access to Finance March 15-16, 2007
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The project We estimate returns to capital for a set of very small household enterprises. No paid employees, capital of less than $US 1000 (~two-thirds of the income distribution in Mexico)
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Returns to capital in microenterprises --Why do we care?
Large portion of urban labor market is self-employed. About one-quarter in Mexico What is the potential for growth of these enterprises? Financial market imperfections can result in large inefficiencies, underinvestment
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Why might returns be high or low?
Low returns: Several influential theory papers posit some minimum scale of investment / non-convex production sets (Banerjee and Newman 1993; Aghion and Bolton 1997) High returns: Capital constraints Risk / uncertainty
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Evidence on returns to capital in enterprises
Among others: Banerjee and Duflo 2003 (74%-100%) Bigsten et al (30%) Udry and Anogol 2006 (60%-250%) De Mel, McKenzie and Woodruff 2007 (60%) McKenzie and Woodruff 2006 (10%/month)
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Returns from ENAMIN data
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What is wrong with existing evidence?
Some from cross section: Worry about conflating ability and capital investment Some from loan programs: Measure only for the self-selected sample that applies for credit McKenzie and Woodruff suggests that returns are high in the broad sample of firms, yet take up rates for loan programs are low
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The Experiment Randomized experiment where we provide grants to enterprises to create exogenous variation in capital stock Selected 207 retail firms in Leon, Guanajuato Sample drawn from block-to-block survey of households in selected UPMs Surveyed first in November 2005, then quarterly through November 2006 (5 waves)
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Capital shock After the first and third round of the survey, randomly selected firms were given capital shock ~$140, in cash or equipment 33% of mean baseline capital stock, 50% of mean monthly earnings Use grants rather than loans because we want to measure the full spectrum of firms
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What part of the population?
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Random Assignment to treatment
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Attrition something to address
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Returns to capital
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Returns to capital
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Attrition: Lower Lee bounds
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Heterogeneity of returns
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High returns to MFIs making small loans
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Conclusions Use random shocks to capital stock to estimate returns to capital Data noisy, but suggest monthly returns in the 20%-35% range Returns in the constrained firms These returns are even higher than the returns we find from cross-sectional OLS data (attenuation?)
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